Collection of Image Galleries

Welcome to my collection of galleries. Here you will find my various galleries showcasing many of the images I have taken over the past few years. There are many more images not yet posted to the site but I hope to get these images up soon so keep checking back as I add more content to the galleries!

(15 photos in gallery)

This is where you can find all the most recent photography I have done. I am constantly being asked if I have any new images to showcase, or what new exciting things I have seen while traveling on my expeditions. Hopefully this gallery will be a great way of answering these questions!

(22 photos in gallery)

Beyond our solar system, interstellar dust and gas form what are known as Nebulae. These can be a real treat to photograph with wide angle lenses and rich field telescopes and often leave me struck with a real sense of awe at what lies just above in the night sky.

(5 photos in gallery)

(2 photos in gallery)

Here you will find images I have taken of planets in our Solar System. Planets can have raging weather patterns just like on Earth. Jupiter weather is very dynamic so it appears different every time it is seen!

(3 photos in gallery)

(1 photos in gallery)

Meteor showers are always exciting to watch, yet difficult to capture. Most of the time I kick back in a lawn chair and just observe these wonderful shows, but I hope to image more of them going forward so this will be the spot to find them.

(11 photos in gallery)

There isn't always enough time to set up the "big rig" so I often use a camera on a regular tripod to capture events in the night sky. Nightscape scenes (Landscape photography done at night) offer a completely different perspective of the sky not seen in deep space images.

(2 photos in gallery)

(2 photos in gallery)

Star clusters can be a real challenge for photography. Because some of the globular clusters are much brighter than nebulae it is possible to see them in great detail visually through a telescope. People often comment how clusters actually look round through a telescope. It can be challenging to reproduce this feeling in the photography of these fine objects.